29 So. 2d 778 | La. | 1947
This is a mandamus proceeding in which the duly appointed deputies of the Criminal Sheriff of the Parish of Orleans (115 in number) seek an order commanding the city of New Orleans and the members of its Commission Council to adopt an amended budget of expenditures for the year 1946 so as to include therein sufficient funds for the payment of their salaries, as required by Act No.
The sole defense to the suit is that Act No.
(1) That the statute, which effects a change in the salaries of relators, as fixed by law, did not receive a favorable vote of two-thirds of the members of each House as required by Section 34 of Article III of the Constitution of 1921, and
(2) That Act No. 294 is a local or special law and, as such, is violative of Section 6 of Article IV of the Constitution in that no publication of notice of intention to apply for its passage was given.
After a hearing in the District Court, the constitutionality of Act No.
We first address our attention to the contention of respondents that Act No.
Section 34 of Article III of the Constitution reads at follows: "Salaries of public officers, whether fixed in this Constitution or otherwise, may be changed by vote of two-thirds of the members of each House of the Legislature". (Italics ours.)
We have italicized the word "changed" in the above-quoted section because counsel for the relators maintain, at the outset, that the provision is without application here for the reason that the Legislature did not change the salaries of relators as their salaries were not fixed by law at the time *245 the Act was adopted and that the real purpose of the statute is to fix with certainty the number and the salaries of the deputy criminal sheriffs of the Parish of Orleans.
In view of the foregoing proposition, it is of immediate importance that we determine whether the statute effected a salary change — for, if it did not, Section 34 of Article III of the Constitution is without bearing in the case.
The authority of the Legislature to fix the salaries of the deputy criminal sheriffs of the Parish of Orleans is derived from Section 88 of Article VII of the Constitution, the pertinent part of which declares:
"Until otherwise provided by the Legislature, the salaries of the following officers of the parish of Orleans and the City of New Orleans shall be as follows:
"Clerk of the Criminal District Court, four thousand ($4,000) dollars per annum; Criminal Sheriff, five thousand ($5,000) dollars per annum, and each of his deputies not less than One Hundred ($100) dollars per month; * * * and all of which salaries shall be payable as now or may be hereafter provided by law."
It is conceded that, at the time the Constitution of 1921 became operative, the salaries of the deputy criminal sheriffs were fixed and paid by the Commission Council of the City of New Orleans and continued to be fixed and paid by that body until the year 1928, when the Legislature, by Act No. 108, provided that the Criminal Sheriff of the Parish of Orleans would be entitled to appoint *246 eighty-nine deputies at various salaries which were fixed in the statute and that the salaries be paid by the City of New Orleans.
After the passage of Act No.
Act No.
The above-quoted provisions produced the legal effect of "unfixing" the number and the salaries of the deputy criminal sheriffs previously established by Act No.
Thus it is clear that, from and after the passage of Act No.
Counsel for relators, in stressing that Section 34 of Article III of the Constitution is without pertinence to the validity of Act No.
On the other hand, the City Attorney claims that the McKay case cannot be regarded as authority against the proposition that Act No.
An analysis of the reasoning upon which the McKay case is predicated has convinced us that the decision presents a legal parallel to the case at bar. When the constitutionality of Act No.
The City Attorney, however, insists that the legal situation relative to the salaries of the deputy criminal sheriffs presented to the Court in the McKay case is not at all comparable to the circumstances pertaining in the case at bar; that the opinion in the McKay case is based solely on the ground that there had never been a previous fixing of salaries, whereas, in the instant case, we are confronted with the fact that Act No.
We quite agree with the City Attorney that any repeal of Act No.
It must be borne in mind that we are not here concerned with the constitutionality of Act No.
Accordingly, Act No.
Since we view Act No.
Finally, respondents assail the constitutionality of Act No.
We perceive little merit in the contention. The Criminal Sheriff of the Parish of Orleans and his deputies are constitutional officers. See Sections 85, 88 and 89 of Article VII of the Constitution. The Criminal Sheriff, by Section 85 of Article VII, is required to assign a deputy sheriff to each of the five sections of the Criminal District Court to act as criers of that Court. The Criminal Sheriff and his deputies have charge of the parish jail and are required to perform numerous other duties pertaining to law enforcement. In truth, they are arms of the law.
The fact that the deputies are paid by the City of New Orleans is of no moment in determining whether a law passed for the purpose of fixing their salaries is a local or special law. The words *254
"local" or "special" law as used in Section 6 of Article IV of the Constitution have been declared in numerous cases to refer to such laws wherein private individuals are seeking some private advantage or advancement for the benefit of private persons or property within a certain locality. See State v. Dalon, 35 La.Ann. 1141, 1142; Williams v. Guerre,
In State v. Dalon, supra, where Act No.
The City Attorney attempts to distinguish the Dalon case from the matter at hand on the ground that "there is no analogy between the establishment of indispensable judicial machinery for the prevention and punishment of crime and the mere *255 increase of deputy sheriffs' salaries". This argument, we think, overlooks the fact that the Criminal Sheriff and his deputies are indispensable and important adjuncts to law enforcement and the salaries which the deputies are paid for their work as officers of the law are necessarily interrelated with the proper and competent administration of justice.
The judgment appealed from is affirmed.
HAMITER and HAWTHORNE, JJ., concur in the decree.